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tv   ABC News Good Morning America  ABC  July 21, 2012 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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>> for those that survived, the trauma. this mother and her children, saved by this man, will be reunited this morning. we're covering all the angles with david muir and chris cuomo on the scene. from abc news, this is a special edition of "good morning america," tragedy in colorado, movie theater massacre. and good morning, everybody. we're going the get straight to david and chris in colorado in a moment. first, we want to run down the latest developments. we have a total of seven casualties. 12 people killed. 58 injured. hoping the death count doesn't rise. 11 of the injured are in critical condition. overnight, police started
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identifying the dead. they started to notify the family. we saw images like this one. this woman was overheard saying of her loved one, quote, they cannot find him. >> a vigil was held last night. new details about the suspect. was he on prescription drug at the time of the shooting? and we have much more on the elaborate trip wires keeping police from his apartment. david muir leads us off. >> reporter: good morning. from aurora. a profound sadness settles in. police in some cases going door to doer notifying the families of the dead. a small vigil overnight. a larger one later in the week end. jars of up known liquid, trip
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wires, booby traps found at the suspect's apartment. unlike anything authorities have ever seen. overnight, police making the strategic decision to postpone attempts to get inside james holmes' apartment. investigator here are now asking for additional help from the federal government. while continuing the evacuation order for the four other apartment buildings nearby. >> an awful lot of wires, trip wires. jars full of ammunition. jars full of liquid. a lot of challenges to get in there safely. ♪ amazing grace >> reporter: as night fell, families came together in prayer and remembrance. >> it's just devastating and really hard to deal with. >> right now, find four people, give them the best hugs you have! >> we are seeing this community rise up and do the things that
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great communities do. >> reporter: this morning, many for questions than answers about what the possible motive could have been. police say holmes died his hair a fiery color and said, i am the skroeker. reminiscent of heath ledger's famous portrayal. >> he's been shot. >> i've got a child victim. i need rescue at the back door of theater nine now. >> he didn't move at all. >> reporter: steefb barton was in the midst of a cross-country bike trip when he made the decision to see a movie. he was shot in the neck and the chest. >> it seemed very method call. he was just unloading into the crowd. >> reporter: so many extraordinary survival stories. federal help will arrive today at the scene of the apartment. at the theater, security's been
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stepped up at movie theaters all over aurora and across the nation. the jitters significantly higher because of this tragedy. >> david, thank you. we'll come back to you many times in the course of the broadcast. we're learning more about the suspect this morning. james holmes has been described as a loner. he's apparently brilliant. studying for a ph.d. in neuroscience. he drew from one of the characters in the movie, the joker. >> reporter: authorities will try to figure out what to do with the booby trapped apartment of james holmes. his gun jammed. he left the gun behind with bullets still in there. bullets that could have killed more people. police say he started to assemble his arsenal in may in
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local june shots and online. everything bought legally. >> he purchased four guns in the last 60 days at gun shops. and through the internet, he purchased over 6,000 rounds of ammunition. >> reporter: he had no criminal record in colorado other than a speeding ticket. he began to quietly plan the attack around the same time he withdrew from a ph.d. program at the university of colorado. by friday night, he transformed himself into a killer. >> he's a guy that so left reality, he's now in a make believe world that he's part of the batman world. >> reporter: holmes grew up here in a prosperous san diego community. this was holmes six years ago. a clean-cut, 5'11" student. he was seen as a loner. >> standoffish. didn't talk to many people. >> he was just quiet.
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just quite. >> reporter: holmes' parents were devastated by the action of their son. as his father left home for denver, the family expressed sorrow for the families. >> he's not saying much to the police. what has he said? >> he's said a few things, the famous, now, i am the joker statement. he also told police to go in the apartment, which was booby trapped. he told them he was calm throughout the shooting because two hours before the attack, he took 100 milligrams of vicodin. >> he has said nothing about the big question, motive. >> completely unclear. he asked for a lawyer. as not talked since according to the authorities. >> our chief investigative correspondent, brian ross, thank you. let's go to washington, d.c.
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and our senior justice correspondent, pierre thomas. >> reporter: police continue to deal with a bomb factory that was rigged to massacre authorities. there are wires and improvised explosives everywhere. they've yet to set foot in the p suspect's apartment. >> is there a sense of when they're going to go in and how long it will take to clean up this mess? >> we're being told days, several days. it's so dangerous again. they've taken snapshots through the window. they've used remote controlled cameras to try to look through the room. they're so afraid to set foot in there. the trip wires could detonate the explosives. >> the shooting is over. this man continues s ts to ter.
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>> you're picking up that there is widespread concern about copy cats? >> yes. we're expecting a bulletin warning people that theaters and other entertainment venues might be targets. they're giving them signs to look for. this is something that is a big concern going forward. as you saw yesterday, police in washington, new york, and other major jurisdictions stepping up security. >> thank you, pierre. let's go to chris cuomo. he's looking at the stories of the 12 people who died. chris, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning, dan. how are you? for all the intrigue surrounding who did this, this story is about the lives he ruined. in this university hospital and others in the area, doeses are still struggling to recover or just survive.
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and they are the lucky ones. because as we know for sure, 12 lives were lost in a night that should have never happened. last night at a local high school, emotionings ran high for family and friends still waiting and wondering. but for others, news of the worst has already come. jessica ghawi was a 24-year-old aspiring sports caster. she sent a last tweet before the show started. movie starts in 20 minutes. we spoke to her brother, jordan. she was tweeting and online and active up until the final moments. how was she living right up until the end? >> she was happy. excited about the movie. >> reporter: last night, jordan would write his own tweet. let us remember the names of the victims and not coward who committed this act. victims like mikayla. we saw her sister mourning.
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matt mcquin, seen here in his high school yearbook was confirmed dead. we're learning about some of the youngest victims. this their told a local fox affiliate that his 6-year-old daughter has died and his ex-wife had been shot but survived. >> i was told at 3:00 in the morning from a family member in new york to tell me that ashley had been shot and they didn't know where my child was. after being thrown in circles and circles and telling me, oh, yes, you'll be able to see her in just a moment, i find my child is dead. >> reporter: that frustration was echoed throughout the day. >> tell me where he is. okay, find my son. i don't know where he is. somebody find him and call us. tell him to call us. his name is alex sullivan. please call so we can find him, all right? thanks. there he is.
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he's -- today's his birthday for god's sake. 27. >> reporter: we learned late last night that alex, too, was a victim. he was at the movie celebrating his 27th birthday and his first wedding anniversary on sunday. adding to the bitterness of the loss here, bianna, is that these kids, so many were so young. this was a batman movie. the unknown is the hardest part for these families. we're going hear about who was actually killed in the theater. this is just the beginning for a painful process for so, so many. >> so much innocence lost. chris, thank you. this massacre has put the safety of so called soft terror targets back in the spotlight. if you head to the theaters this weeke weekend, you'll likely see a police presence. john schriffen has been talking to authorities. >> reporter: industry reports
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that this movie will do very well in box offices. the action of this movie, it's expected to send moviegoers to the edge of their seats. after the shooting in colorado, many people are now left on edge. it's a scene playing out in major cities across the country. police departments in new york, chicago, and los angeles are among the many cities nationwide that are ramping up security at theaters in response to friday's shooting. >> doing it to address the potential of a copy cat ept. >> reporter: movie theaters are also taking action. amc theaters says, they're though longer allowing people to go in costume. and yet, even with the increased security, some anxious batman fans say fear lingers in the back of their minds. >> i was like, maybe we should sit closer to the exits. >> i'm afraid for these kids when they're older. when they're young adults,
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they'll probably have to go through a metal detector to go to a movie or shopping center. >> reporter: the increase in police presence, use of barricades, and critical response vehicles, some people say they can breathe a sigh of relief. >> trucks go by. >> reporter: at this theater in new york, screenings were sold out. >> i'm not the kind of person to let fear control me. >> that's true. i don't either. >> reporter: and in response to the shooting, warner brothers decided to cancel the movie's premier in paris and cut off interviews for christian bale, anne hathaway, morgan freeman, out of respect to the victims' families. >> other stores develop this morning. for that, we go to ron claiborne. we begin with the search for the missing cousins in iowa. police have now reclassified that case as an abduction. a special fbi team found nothing
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after searching the bottom of a nearby lake for hours. the 10-year-old and 8-year-old disappeared a week ago. thousands of people are fleeing syria. the violence in damascus escalates. syrians have entered lebanon. thousands of iraqis are returning home. the past few days have been the most deadly. nearly 500 people have been killed. and an air force instructor has been convicted. staff sergeant luis walker could be sentenced to life in prison and dishonorable discharge. 11 others are in traubl for allegedly sexually abusing trainees. the calls to remove the joe
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paterno statue are ongoing. the decision should come next week whether it will be removed. finally, the olympic torch has arrived in london. the royal marine bearing the torch rappelled down to the tower of london. kelly holmes took the torch on a tour of the land mark. >> let's check the weather now. dangerous heat in parts of the country. ginger zee, back from vacation. good morning to you. >> good morning. in the northeast, the low 60s. some of the coolest weather we have seen for months. not the case in the center part of the nation. oklahoma city, yesterday, 109. the hottest since 2006. this is pretty epic heat here. fort smith, arkansas, 108. it will be humid, foop it will feel like 110 or so from dallas
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to south dakota into south central illinois. it's a large area. and it's not just today. this is where you'll see the century mark today. 101 for denver. 104, hill city. kansas city at 102. watch all of the numbers come up the next couple of days. high will sit over the center of the nation and move to chicago by monday. you'll see 101 start to pop up. you'll be in the 90s this weekend. there's some severe weather chances here from louisiana to texas and arkansas and mississippi. we'll talk more about that coming up.
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>> and with that severe weather threat will be some intense rains. we'll talk about that coming up and show you pictures there new orleans. they had record flooding yesterday. >> all right, ginger. thank you. we want to go back to david muir in colorado with an amazing survival story. >> reporter: good morning, i'm here with eric hunter. he has an incredible story. you were in the adjacent theater watching "batman" as well. when the gunfire broke out, it came through the walls. >> the first three shots. then another eight or nine. by that time, i'm walking down the stairs, i see blood on the stairs. i turn to the crowd and tell them there's something wrong, we need to get out of here. we need to call the cops.
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>> reporter: you told me there was gun fire in the movie. you couldn't tell the difference between the movie and the real thing. >> right. the first three shots, we couldn't tell. >> reporter: you opened a door to the theaters. you noticed two teenage girls. one was grazed by a bullet. >> i seen two 16, 17-year-old girls. one was grazed, shot in the mouth. they were asking me for help. i pulled them in. as i closed the door, i saw the shooter come around the corner. i closed the door. i heard it for about five seconds. >> you're pulling them in and holding the door closed at that point? >> right. >> reporter: does the gunman try to come into the theater? >> he bangs on the boor. bangs on the door. i tried to hold it. thn i got out of the way. >> reporter: the police came in telling everybody to put their arms up in the air.
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you were able to get out and encourage everybody else to come out. >> definitely. >> reporter: you saw the injured and the wounded on the floor. >> a lot of people injured, bleeding. a lot of people hurt. >> reporter: you're one of the unsung see heroes for help those two teenage girls. thanks for coming in this morning. i appreciate it. >> thank you. thank you. >> we want to go to david kerley in washington. the president was caught offguard. he put politics aside. >> reporter: the president is using the weekly address to tell americans to take time to reflect. both candidates canceled appearances and tried to counsel the country. >> my daughters go to the movies. what if malia and sasha had been at the theater as so many of our kids do every day? michelle and i will be fortunate
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enough to hug our girls a little tighter tonight. i'm sure you'll do the same with your children. >> it went farther. both campaigns suspended ads in k colorado. it's an important swing state. romney with no fund raisers planned over the weekend. obama expected to stay quiet over the weekend as well. >> any plans to get back on the trail? >> it worked out for both campaigns. it was going to be a quiet weekend for both men. monday, i think we'll see the candidates ramp back up the campaigns on the trail, start talking about the election rather than what has happened in aurora. >> for now, a moment of unity for the nation. coming up on "good morning america," the young woman who survived a mass shooting at a
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ma mall a month ago. now dead in the movie theater shooting. >> we'll talk live to the 14-year-old high school student who ran back into the theater to help his parents and wound up helping a complete stranger. keep it here for this special edition of "good morning america." has helped fund economic and environmental recovery. long-term, bp's made a five hundred million dollar commitment to support scientists studying the environment. and the gulf is open for business - the beaches are beautiful, the seafood is delicious. last year, many areas even reported record tourism seasons. the progress continues... but that doesn't mean our job is done. we're still committed to seeing this through. that lets you build your better breakfast with avocado! imagine avocado on a toasty bacon egg & cheese on flatbread. come celebrate avocado season before the sun goes down on this delicious addition! subway. build your better breakfast.
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we've got a lot more coming up on this special edition of "gma." we're going to be speak og the mother of jessica ghawi, the first confirmed victim. one of 12 who died inside that theater. diane sawyer with the wrenching interview with this young woman's mother. and an uplifting reunion. a man who saved a mom and her young children. she was there with her boyfriend. he got shot. she got shot. this man is heralded for saving her 4-month-old. a lot of stories to bring you this morning. the heart ache from aurora. her story and that of her now fiance.
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they went to the theater with two young children. they went as boyfriend and girlfriend. they endured the unthinkable. in those frantic hours afterwards, he proepoposed to h. we have chris cuomo on the ground leading the coverage along with abc anchor david muir. a lot more coming up. a very special edition of "gma" on this saturday morning. dan harris alongside bianna golodryga. keep it here. we'll be back in a minute. ñcús
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and she had a -- an epiphany at that moment that it could happen to any of us at any time. instead of being afraid of that, she embraced life even more fully. >> a mother's overwhelming grief as she remembers her daughter, who escaped one mass shooting just a month ago, only for tragedy to find her in a movie theater in colorado. good morning, america. i'm bianna golodryga. >> an incredible twist. you feel for her mom. good morning, everybody. i'm dan harris. it's july 21st. we now learn the names of the people that died in the worst
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mass shooting in american history. 70 casualties. 12 people dead, 58 wounded. >> and we have the uplifting and emotional rekrunon of the mother of two young children shot and wounded and the young man, also wouned, who saved her life. >> we'll start with david muir in aurora. good morning, once again. >> reporter: good morning, dan. as you know, today will be an extraordinary day in aurora. police continue to let families know if their loved ones are victims. there was a small vigil overnight. there will be a larger one this weekend. we expect many, many people to come. this theater is just 13 miles from columbine high school. these denver area communities are schooled in this kind of tragedy. the other scene, the apartment
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building, the suspect's apartment. they decided not go in overnight. waiting for federal help. the apartment booby trapped with jars and trip wires. they'll be moving in once help arrives. back to you. >> we want to go to ron claiborne with the other stories. actually, we're going chris cuomo with another story. good morning, chris. >> reporter: good morning, bianna. we've been talking about the 70 people injure here. the biggest number in american history. the very dubious statistic to lean on. as we learned about the tragedy, the first name that came out was a young woman who really captured what this was all about. full of life. so much promise. and a life taken too soon, almost twice. described as vivacious and full of life, jessica ghawi dropped everything to move to denver to pursue a career in journalism. we spoke to her brother, jordan.
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>> it was a passion to her life. the obstacles she overcame. >> reporter: the 25-year-old aspiring sports caster from san antonio, texas, was at a toronto mall earlier this year when a gunman went on a rampage. her mother talked to diane sawyer. >> she wrote afterwards, a final post on her personal blog, i can't get this odd feeling out of my chest. this empty, almost sickening feeling won't go away. >> yes, and she was -- very affected by watching the victims being brought out of that shooting. and realizing that several of them were very close to her own age and realized that life is very fragile. and she had a -- an epiphany at that moment that it could happen to any of us at any time. instead of being afraid of that,
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she embraced life even more fully. from that time on. and -- i'm sorry. >> there is no need to be sorry. i know that she read, i was shown how fragile life is. we don't know when our time on earth will end, when or where we'll breathe our last breath. >> beautifully written. and -- we really thought we had literally dodged a bullet that day. and i was so grateful that she was all right. and that -- the chances of her experiencing anything like that ever again were impossible. or so i thought. >> and she texted you i believe her last text to you was, i'm so
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excited for your trip here next week? >> yes. >> and i need my -- >> and i need my mommy. >> reporter: on her way to the movie, she said, i never thought i would have to coerce a goo into seeing "the dark knight rises" with me. minutes later, shots rang out. soon after, jes ka's mother received a phone call from brent. >> i said, is she okay? he said, i'm so sorry. i screamed, please tell me she's alive. of course, he couldn't tell me that. >> reporter: jessica's life ended too soon and left her family struggling for answers. >> my life is forever changed and forever damaged. by one person's horrible violent choice. >> reporter: remembering a daughter they loved so dearly. >> we were blessed to have her every second.
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>> reporter: and that is the painful message that comes out of the loss of somebody like jessica ghawi. it's a reminder to everybody to love the people in their family, to enjoy their lives. one of the few messages we can pull out of a tragedy like this, dan and bianna. t helps us move forward together. the recognition that we have to appreciate life. you never know what will happen next. >> well said, chris cuomo. we want to take a quick break from our coverage of thatdy zaster to check the weather forecast. for that, we go to ginger zee. a potentially dangerous situation setting up in parts of the southeast. a lot of rain fell yesterday. a record 3.23 inches in new orleans. flood watches and warnings up for today. more rain coming at you. 2 to 4 inches for that city and others. we have pumping moisture here
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into the southeast. trapping below the stationary front. the northeast is a whole different picture. boy, from the 100s and 90s, down into the 70s. a comfortable day ahead for fad philadelphia, boston, new york. i want to leave you with a look across the nation. one pocket of severe weather in parts of east texas through mississippi. >> this weather report has been brought to you by k-9 advantix 2. a case of a hero and the mother he raced to save from the
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the terrifying scene that unfoaled in the movie theater
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highlight td incredible bravery and heroism. one of them is 19-year-old terrell brooks. he helped patricia and her children when they were in danger. thank you for joining us. we appreciate you coming on this morning. this is the first time you have seen each other since this terror unfolded. patricia, you said after you were shot, you couldn't remember what happened. you heard a man's voice. you believe it was terrell. he saved your life and your childrens'. what do you have to say to him this morning? >> thank you. i don't know where i would be. i don't remember exactly everything that happened. but i just -- i thank him because -- i mean, having him there next to me, knowing that there was somebody there is just -- it's -- it's comforting
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knowing that somebody was wi willing to. >> do you remember what he was telling you? >> no, i remember hearing him scream and saying oh, god, when he got hit. and i remember him, like, continuing to talk, what was being said, i mean, i just db i can't remember all of it. it was just, everything was happening around so fast. you just, you can only take in so much. >> and so jerrell. what were you saying to her? what do you recall when you saw patricia and her daughters? >> my first thought was seeing them two on the floor. i noticed she had her son in her arms. her youngest daughter held to her left arm. i was trying fguide her out. i said, we have to go. she said, i'm -- here are my two
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kids. my first reaction was to guide them to the door. i pushed them up. as i was pushing them, i got hit on my thigh. i thing that was what she got in her right leg. >> did you know initially you were shot? >> initially, no. i felt sharp pain. i tried to move my left leg, i went down, i looked at my hand, noticed it was bleeding. it got real at that moment. >> what was the environment like around you? sheer chaos? everybody trying to dash out the doors? >> yes. >> patricia, your daughter, you said she fell. your 4-year-old daughter, you shielded her. tell us about that frightening moment. >> you just -- all i could think of was, i mean, just -- just blocking her. shielding her, making sure she didn't get hurt. she was so disoriented.
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i remember her looking around. she was asleep, just looking, thinking, what's going on? trying to keep calm. so that she didn't start freaking out more. it was just so -- scary and -- her face just -- >> i can understand. innocent enough to take your children to the theater. sheer terror unfolds around you. jerrell, where were you seated relative to the shooter? >> i was about six rows away from the back exit. when i first saw the shooter, he was closer to the screen in the corner. the only reason i saw him was the flashes from the gunshots. that's how i knew where he was. >> did you think you were going to lose your life that night? >> i'm sorry. >> did you think you were going to lose your life that night? >> um -- my life definitely
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flashed before my eyes at that moment. it was -- it's hard to say. when i first was hit, that's when it got really real for me. at that initial moment, i was thinking, i could sit here and see what happens or i can just make a bold move and try to go. and thankfully, i made it out okay. and that patricia and her kids made it out okay. >> and rightly so, you're being heralded as a hero. how does that word make you feel? >> i feel like i was doing what was the best intentions in the situation. i don't consider myself a hero. i feel like someone was in distress. i'm not the one, the kind of person that would let them be in that situation and me try to get myself out. knowing there's someone, trying to protect her two kids. if i could get her out, maybe i
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would have got out, maybe i wouldn't. as long as i knew she was okay, i was all right. >> you told chris last night, you were at the wrong place at the right time. i want to end on a good note. late last night, your boyfriendl this. he was in the theater with you. tell us about that, and how it feels now. >> it feels -- i mean -- i'm ecstatic. extremely excited. at the same time, you have this tragedy. row have some sadness hanging over. and i just -- i hope that there's just -- so much more good news to come out of this. >> all right. we thank you both for joining us this morning. we'll be right back. ti thankyoud for a relaxing vacation. ♪ sometimes, we go for a ride in the park. maybe do a little sightseeing.
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and that concludes our special coverage of the massacre in colorado this morning. we'll have much more on "world news." thank you so much for watching abc news. we're always online. ♪ i know a blessing in disguise ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] you know the difference between paying more and getting more. that's value sense. at scott we're all about value. introducing the scott shared values program. get deals like free movie rentals, free admission to family attractions and more. use your value sense. sign up at scottbrand.com.
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i got a medicare supplement insurance plan. [ male announcer ] if you're eligible for medicare, you may know it only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. call and find out about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement plans, it could save you thousands in out-of-pocket costs. call now to request your free decision guide. i've been with my doctor for 12 years. now i know i'll be able to stick with him. you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. plus, there are no networks, and you never need a referral. see why millions of people have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp. don't wait. call now.
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>> good morning, everyone. only terry mcsweeney. let's start with a quick first look at the weekend forecast. here's meteorologist lisa argen. >> hi, terry. we are starting out with the clear skies. temperatures in the 50s and a couple 60s out there. we are on our way to a rapid warming trend today. in fact, numbers are going to climb into the upper 90s. so starting out with a touch of fog at the coast. upper 70s by noontime. talking 60s at the coast. going to stay comfortable there. upper 90s inland. >> lisa, thanks very much. the

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